Abstract

This study investigates how and where distance learners use handheld devices and the impact this has on learning habits, access to learning content and quality of work. It analyses the spatial dimension of anytime-anywhere learning and, with a focus on anywhere learning, it explores students’ ongoing negotiation of the flow between and across study locations. The study concludes by proposing two new concepts: the flow of places and place of space. These should help direct the framing of future studies into the places, spaces, and mobility of formal and informal seamless learning. A dataset comprising 446 responses from undergraduate students enrolled at the UK’s largest distance learning university was analysed in respect to three research questions. All age groups, study levels, and disciplines were represented. Five key findings are: most students now use handheld devices for study-related learning; the distribution of study-related learning tasks was similar in all seven study places; there is a strong, statistically-significant correlation between the number of study places in which handheld devices are used and the number of study task types performed; two fifths of students using a handheld device for learning have noticed a change in study habit and benefit to learning; and multiple regression analysis shows three variables (number of study places, number of study tasks, and change in study habits) are predictors of finding it easier to access learning materials and improved quality of learners’ work.

Highlights

  • The concept of anytime anywhere learning is over a decade old (Attewell & Savill-Smith, 2005) yet there remains much to be done in understanding what anywhere learning looks like and whether changes in the geographic reach of handheld technologies is impacting on study habits and quality of learning

  • Access to tablet and smartphone devices was highest among the 26–35 years old age group and lowest among those over 56 years old

  • Results show that Open University (OU) student access of tablets in 2016 is similar to that found in the US ECAR survey (57% ownership) (Brooks, 2016) but is higher than the 41% reported for the UK higher education sector by Newman and Beetham (2017)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The concept of anytime anywhere learning is over a decade old (Attewell & Savill-Smith, 2005) yet there remains much to be done in understanding what anywhere learning looks like and whether changes in the geographic reach of handheld technologies is impacting on study habits and quality of learning. Educators urgently need to understand how learning designs and teaching models must be reconfigured such that they are better compatible with the flexible, mobile needs of their students (Awadhiya & Miglani, 2016) and deliver richer, seamless learning experiences to those who want them (Chan et al, 2006). This is true for online and distance learning, yet there remains a paucity of research about how distance learners use mobile technologies. The paucity of research into how distance learners use mobile devices needs addressing. More applied research is needed to move beyond consideration of user readiness or acceptance (e.g., Lam, Wong, Cheng, Ho, & Yuen, 2011) and towards use of mobile computing devices by teaching staff to teach, and of university students to learn (Gikas & Grant, 2013)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call